Shouldn't you have though of that BEFORE you went to kazan? :)
Just looked it up on the internet - I see its very popular in Australia - outselling Coca-Cola in many districts.
Its coffee, glucose, reduced fat milk and milk solids.
Cant you just add coffee to milk and add a little sugar (sucrose as opposed to glucose) to make something similar?
Maybe I could take off from my home in the USA, fly to Australia, then to Kazan with a couple litres of the stuff. Doesn't seem to be too much to do for a fellow forum member, does it?
Tell you what - put a sign on your front door saying "Danny's Place - Waiting For Union Iced Coffee" just like that so I can find you and I'll be there in a few hours or days.
Did you want the 2 liter container - or two one liter containers?
he wants you to take 2 litres off him, so he must have plenty already!
I know, he said 'bring', but Ozzi's you see, their speling suks a bit.
Besides, they use funny words, and in this respect I'm glad he didn't mention his didgeridoo, because I'm near-sure you'd think he was talking about his thingy.
But off you go and help the poor chap! What you'll do with that goo I haven't got a clou, I only would suggest not to drink it.
I recall travelling back from Oz in 1990, my 'didgeridoo' wouldn't fit in to my case so I was travelling with it, wrapped in a black gash bag, as hand luggage.
Going thru airport security checkpoints in Singapore, quite a few of them bearing in mind our connecting aircraft was delayed out of Sydney, they kept questioning regarding my 'lengthy implement' wrapped in black plastic and replying to them that it was a didgeridoo replies came back, to the effect, 'what the phuck is that?'
Getting tired, having been up for some 24 hours, I ended up replying, when asked, 'it's a lump of phucking wood'. They liked that answer much better :)
Okay - for the sake of all of us who don't SPEAK Ozzie, here is what a didgeridoo is.
The didgeridoo (or didjeridu) is a wind instrument of the Indigenous Australians of northern Australia. It is sometimes described as a natural wooden trumpet or "drone pipe". Musicologists classify it as an aerophone.
A didgeridoo is usually cylindrical or conical in shape and can measure anywhere from 1 to 3 metres (3.2 Feet to 9.8 Feet) in length with most instruments measuring around 1.2 metres. Generally, the longer the instrument, the lower the pitch or key of the instrument. Keys from D to F are the preferred pitch of traditional Aboriginal players.
There are no reliable sources stating the didgeridoo's exact age, though it is commonly claimed to be the world's oldest wind instrument. Archaeological studies of rock art in Northern Australia suggests that the Aboriginal people of the Kakadu region of the Northern Territory have been using the didgeridoo for about 1500 years, based on the dating of paintings on cave walls and shelters from this period. A clear rock painting in Ginga Wardelirrhmeng from the freshwater period (1500 years ago until the present) shows a didjeridu player and two songmen (source: Journey in Time, George Chaloupka, p. 189).